A critical layer model for turbulent pipe flow
B. J. McKeon, A. S. Sharma

TL;DR
This paper introduces a linear model for turbulent pipe flow that explains the scaling and location of fluctuations, revealing critical layer behavior and viscosity effects extending beyond the wall.
Contribution
It presents a novel linear response framework that models turbulent fluctuations without assuming small perturbations, linking response modes to observed turbulence features.
Findings
Identifies critical layer-like behavior in turbulent response modes.
Distinguishes two flow regions with different viscosity influence scaling.
Provides a unified explanation for turbulence scaling laws.
Abstract
A model-based description of the scaling and radial location of turbulent fluctuations in turbulent pipe flow is presented and used to illuminate the scaling behaviour of the very large scale motions. The model is derived by treating the nonlinearity in the perturbation equation (involving the Reynolds stress) as an unknown forcing, yielding a linear relationship between the velocity field response and this nonlinearity. We do not assume small perturbations. We examine propagating modes, permitting comparison of our results to experimental data, and identify the steady component of the velocity field that varies only in the wall-normal direction as the turbulent mean profile. The "optimal" forcing shape, that gives the largest velocity response, is assumed to lead to modes that will be dominant and hence observed in turbulent pipe flow. An investigation of the most amplified velocity…
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